Happy Birthday Fiona
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 10/06/2007 - 12:39They say that one of the keys to being a successful blogger is knowing your niche audience and writing to it. My problem is that I try to hit a lot of niches. So, if you’re coming here for stuff about Second Life, check here. If you’re coming here for stuff about Connecticut politics, and in particular things about the Avery Doninger Civil Rights case, check here. And of course my political posts can be found here. Today’s audience is parents.
Today is Fiona’s sixth birthday. She is off with her grandparents as we prepare. The theme for her party is “Hawaiian Luau”. Kim made a cake
There will be limbo dancing and a treasure hunt. Since Fiona is just six, she and her friends might have difficulty reading clues, so we made it a pictorial treasure hunt. I grabbed the digital camera and took pictures of places where the clues would be located.
Quickly printing them off with a color printer, we have a simple fun treasure hunt for the kids. The clues are placed to maximize the amount of running around they need to do to get from one clue to the next.
Here are the clues:
And, as a final birthday reflection, I’ve created this slide show of pictures of Fiona when she was younger.
You might also want to stop by and read the comments I wrote when she was born.
Happy Birthday Fiona.
Do You Support Florida in the Primary Mess?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 10/05/2007 - 09:13Today, I received an email that started, “Do You Support Florida in the Primary Mess? If not, I don't really want to get into a debate about it on list, so send me a off-list e-mail.” I think this is misguided in several different ways.
First and foremost, I’m very concerned about the compression of the primary schedule. I believe that the political process is best served by on the ground retail politics. By spreading out the primary schedule, it gives more time for candidates to be on the ground in the state shaking hands with real people. Yeah, it would be great if one of the first primary states were Connecticut instead of New Hampshire. That way, I wouldn’t have to take my daughter out of school and drive a couple hundred miles for her to be able to participate in retail presidential politics. Yet I also realize that in some states people have to drive over twice the distance my family traveled just to get to the State Capital.
The more compressed the primary schedule gets, the more candidates will rely on national advertisements and the big dollars required to buy them. It moves us further from the political involvement and deliberative discourse that our country needs.
I recognize the concern of states later in the primary schedule. In the last Presidential cycle, here in Connecticut, the candidate that I was supporting had already withdrawn from the race by the time the primary came around. Yet I don’t believe that changing the primary schedule is the most effective way to address this problem.
Instead, we need to find ways to get people more involved. There are two projects that have recently caught my attention. The first is the Democratic Youth Strategy Network. They are working on “a revolutionary new web
tool that will empower progressive and Democratic activists to run for
office.” I haven’t seen the new web tool so I cannot comment on how revolutionary it really is, but we need tools that encourage and empower people to get more involved, including running for office.
The second project that caught my attention is the National Presidential Caucus. They encourage people to
Come together, face-to-face, with your friends, your neighbors, your community, your country, to deliberate the issues & choose our leaders. Engage in the National Straw Poll on Nov 9th. You CAN make a difference.
It is this coming together, face-to-face to deliberate the issues that I believe is essential to our democracy. A compressed primary schedule doesn’t help this. Watching a few advertisements on national television before voting doesn’t help this. Emails discouraging a debate don’t help this.
Yes, I am concerned about people it states with later primaries not having as much of a voice in the process. One way they can have a stronger voice is to participate in projects like the Democratic Youth Strategy Network and the National Presidential Caucus. These projects will do a lot more to help people find their voices in the political process than simply moving a primary date.
(Cross-posted to Greater Democracy)
Exploring the potential of Drupal, Second Life and Complex Event Processing
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 10/03/2007 - 18:05The online experience is changing from a world where users pull static text off of webpages to a world were the experience is much more immersive with pictures, videos and three dimensional animations and much more interactive with Web 2.0 functionality, instant messaging and real time data. As these changes take place, information providers need to rethink their online strategies and how they use various tools.
At the center of any information strategy is a good content management system. Drupal is a widely popular open source content management system that facilitates the organization and presentation of information. It allows users of the site to easily add content and has been expanded to include better functionality for images and video. It is this ability to easily be expanded that makes it interesting as more immersive synchronous environments become more popular.
One such environment is Second Life. Second Life has been getting more and more attention as companies explore how they can use to achieve corporate goals. With Second Life, you use a Second Life client, instead of a web browser to access the Second Life servers. These servers provide a three-dimensional real time environment where uses interact with objects that have been created as well as with one another. Second Life has it’s own currency which facilitates micropayments there and there is an active currency exchange to change the Second Life currency, called Linden Dollars, into U.S. dollars.
Actually, it is all my fault
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 10/01/2007 - 22:05On a mailing list of Group Psychotherapists, there has recently been a discussion about two teenage girls in Australia "who'd posted their fixation with suicide and self-harm on their My Space sites, and on sites of devotees of the 'emo' subculture...[and] hung themselves in the mountains outside of Melbourne."
People wrote to ask, "What was the effect on that MySpace "group"?...Did any members injure (or kill) themselves after this?...Could this have been prevented?"
The following is my response:
Actually, it is all my fault. ;-|
I spend time visiting MySpace. I have my own MySpace page. I've even written on band pages and have a MySpace post about being emo, particularly as it related to the 2006 U.S. Senate race in Connecticut. (But that's another long story.)
But isn't that the reaction that most people have to a suicide, or some horrible shootings somewhere, or other times when people act irrationally and hurt themselves or people around them?
And isn't it much easier to blame it on the culture? Suicides in MySpace are due to the 'emo' culture. Columbine, as we will all recall, was due to heavy metal music, and I'm sure that 'emo' is just the MySpace manifestation of too much heavy metal music.
Nonetheless, we do always come back to what could have been done, and I guess that is a good thing. We should always be looking for ways we can reach out and help those around us a little better. That, I suspect is the real core of the human condition.
31 years ago, this month, I was a freshman in college. I had skipped my senior year of high school, so all my old classmates were seniors back in high school. I received a letter from home where my mother wrote that, by the way, Rocky is missing. Rocky was a girl I had been fond of before heading off to college. Panicked, I called home to get details. She had been walking to the library one evening and never showed up. Over the following month, there were reports of people who thought they had seen her one place or another.
At the end of the month they found her body in a ravine a few towns away. No one ever figured out why this happened. I heard this, from newspaper clippings my mother sent me. They came after the funeral, so I never got my chance to say goodbye.
The day I got the news, I wandered, in shock into my Hebrew class. There was a pop quiz, and at the bottom of the quiz I wrote the Hebrew word for "Why?" The professor, either answering the question of why we have pop quizzes, or coming back with a good Talmudic response to existentialism changed the last letter to become "To Learn".
So, I think about Rocky, and I think about Stephanie and Jodie and I all I can do is hope that I can learn a little and find my chance to help someone around me.
Our trip to New Hampshire
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 09/28/2007 - 09:48Wednesday, Kim, Fiona and I drove up to New Hampshire to help with the Edwards campaign on the day of the Democratic Presidential Debate as well as to give Fiona a chance to spend some time with her cousins. It provided a wonderful microcosm of the political landscape.
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